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La Strada (1954, It.) (aka
The Road)
In director Federico Fellini's romantic,
tear-jerking drama and timeless modern-day spiritual fable about
domestic/sexual abuse and oppression - it was the first-ever
Academy Awards winner for Best Foreign Language Film (Italy); the
very simplistic road film (Strada meant "road") that represented
a break from neo-realism,
told about the consequential interactions between three itinerant
traveling performers: a simple-minded young female apprentice, an
abusive strong-man, and a smart tightrope walker (a Fool); the film
was essentially remade in Clint Eastwood's Bronco
Billy (1980) and Woody Allen's Sweet and Lowdown (1999):
- the film's setting was war-ravaged Italy after
the war
Gelsomina (Giulietta Masina)
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Zampano (Anthony Quinn)
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Gelsomina's Mother (Anna Primula)
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- in the film's
opening scene, surly-looking traveling strongman and circus performer
Zampano (Anthony Quinn) suddenly appeared on his motorcycle at
the seaside family village of his recently-deceased female companion
Rosa who died under his care; Rosa's impoverished widowed mother
(Anna Primula) informed her naive, wide and saucer-eyed young
daughter Gelsomina (director Fellini's wife Giulietta Masina) that
Zampano was asking to 'purchase' her (for 10,000 lire) to replace
Rosa as his acting companion and partner; the grieving mother encouraged
her daughter to leave with him: ("You can learn something, earn
money and we'd have one hungry soul less to feed. Zampano is a
kind man, he'll be good to you. You will see the world, learn to
sing and dance")
- the simple-minded, free-spirited waif and gamin
Gelsomina (described by her mother as "a little bit strange"),
who had up to this time lived a simple life, was reluctant, but
had no choice but to accept the arrangement; when Zampano was asked
if Gelsomina would learn something, he bluntly responded: "Sure,
I can teach things even to a dog!"; Gelsomina tried to make the
most of it: "I'll become an artist, will dance and sing like Rosa"
- the main act of the itinerant, brutish street-performer
Zampano as he moved from town to town was to break an iron chain
wrapped around his bare chest with his "lungs of steel", accompanied
by a sensationalist build-up to paltry spontaneous audiences:
("There is a danger that a vein bursts and I spit blood!"), and
his warning words to the faint of heart: "Those, who have weak
nerves, should better look away. It could bleed!"
Gelsomina Learning to Play a Tambour/Drum
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The Clownish Apprentice
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Zampano's Strongman Act
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- as Zampano's vagabond companion and acting-accomplice,
the simple-minded elfin Gelsomina was taught to preface his street
act with music; he abusively brandished a small tree switch and
struck her on the ankles when she persistently misquoted his
introductory lines; he also forbid her to sleep outdoors, and demanded
that she sleep with him inside his tented 'truck'
- afterwards during his muscleman act and comedy
routine, she wore a black bowler-derby hat and
sad-clowned costume (with an oversized coat, floppy shoes and pants,
resembling elements of Harpo Marx, Harry Langdon, and Charlie Chaplin's
the Tramp character), played the trumpet and beat on a tambour
(snare drum), and entertained audiences by dancing and participating
in a comedy skit with Zampano; she was expected to pass a hat for
small donations; over time, Gelsomina's pantomime act became more
popular than Zampano's own routine, and she drew crowds
- one evening, the very trusting Gelsomina felt devastated,
heartbroken and betrayed (with amazing facial expressions) when
a drunken and callous Zampano drove off with a red-headed prostitute
(Giovanna Galli) and abandoned her - she was left stranded and
helpless on the side of a street; she found him the next morning
sleeping it off while parked at the edge of the city at some sandpits;
the rootless and unconnected wanderer Zampano was intimidating
and indifferent and wanted to move on when she proudly showed him
tomato seeds that she had planted in the Earth; he asked: "You
want to wait for the tomatoes to grow?!"
- later, she asked if he treated her the same as he
had with Rosa: "You did it the same way with Rosa?";
he blurted back for her to shut her mouth
- at the site of a wedding party, Gelsomina
was led by small children into the upstairs of a building where
a very ill, bedridden, disabled boy named Oswaldo was kept locked
away and isolated; she was encouraged to make him laugh: "Make
him laugh a little" before
being shooed away
- while they were fed during a wedding feast, Gelsomina
and Zampano struck up a conversation with embittered widow La
Vedova (Marcella Rovere); when the party ended, they were preparing
to sleep in a barn where Zampano continued to deflect probing
questions about his life when Gelsomina again asked about Rosa:
"She worked the same like me?" - he ignored her futile
attempts to communicate
Gelsomina's Rebellion Against Zampano
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Gelsomina in a Hole in a Barn
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Climbing Out of the Hole
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"I Go Away"
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- she proceeded to slide into a hole
in the barn where they were sleeping, and finally decided to rebel
against him; she announced her decision to leave him: "I go away
- Back to my village. I don't like it here with you anymore! It's
not because of the work: I like this work. I like being an artist!
But I don't like you!" - she marched off
- while sitting by the side of a road, she saw a
threesome of uniformed musicians that led her into a nearby town
where she became exhilarated when caught up in a religious procession-parade
in progress; they propelled her along toward another street performer's
act on a high-wire tightrope by Il Matto ("The Fool")
(Richard Basehart) who was seen high above the crowd 40 meters
in the air above the plaza eating spaghetti
- later that evening, Zampano tracked her down, and
forcibly ordered her back into the truck ("Get in"); and
when she refused ("No, never!"), he grabbed and beat her
into submission in order to comply; soon after, they came upon
a ragged-looking traveling circus (known as "Giraffa" with
strong community togetherness, headed by Il Signor Giraffa (Aldo Silvani)),
where the film's three main characters came together as non-salaried
performers working only for tips; Il Matto was first seen by Gelsomina
playing a tiny violin under a ragged circus tent
- a compulsive, feuding conflict immediately developed
between the mindless Zampano and the
taunting and witty Il Matto (who couldn't help but recklessly
tease, antagonize and insult Zampano); Zampano was provoked into
brutality during his strongman performance, and in a furious rage,
he searched for Il Matto afterwards and threatened: ("You'll
have enough of your dumb jokes!")
- afterwards, during Zampano's absence, Il Matto
rehearsed with Gelsomina by teaching her a new act - playing a
trombone while parading around in a menage; the bossy and
bullying Zampano returned and forbade any further contact with
Il Matto: ("She's
not allowed to work with this vagabond!... Because I want it that
way!");
after being doused with a pail of water, the oafish Zampano responded
with violence; he angrily drew a knife and chased after Il Matto;
Zampano was handcuffed and briefly jailed by police, and both men
were permanently fired from the circus
- the owner of the circus offered Gelsomina to live
with the traveling circus ("You can come with us");
when Il Matto asked why she would remain with Zampano, instead
of staying with the circus: ("Why
you won't run away from him?"), she answered:
"I tried already, but I can't"; she said that it would
make no difference wherever she decided to go: ("Nobody needs
me. What for do I live?");
she cried in despair: "Why am I born to this world?"
- Il Matto proposed that she come away with him: "And
if I'll offer you to come with me, I'll teach you to become a rope-dancer.
High above, in the spotlights! I've got a car, we can drive around,
we'll have a lot of fun!",
Gelsomina rejected Il Matto's offer of freedom from Zampano; he
realized that she had been abusively threatened with physical violence: "You
have to stay with Zampano, to be involved in all his stupid things
and let him hit you like a donkey! That's life"
- when Il Matto suggested that she had stayed with
Zampano because he liked her: ("Maybe he likes you?"),
Gelsomina brightened up with the idea, as he summarized for her: "If
you won't stay with him, who else will?"; she interpreted
his notion that her rightful place in life was to remain with Zampano
"Every existing thing, is here on purpose..."
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"And you, you're good for something as well..."
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Gelsomina with the Pebble-Stone
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- in the film's most significant scene, Il Matto presented
his own philosophy of life, that everything on earth - people,
animals and even inanimate objects - existed for a specific
and particular purpose (similar to the teachings of St. Francis)
- to convince Gelsomina of her own life's worth: "....For example,
this stone here...It's here for some reason. And this little stone...I
don't know for what that stone is good, but it has got its function.
Or everything would be meaningless. Even the stars. That's, what
I believe at least. And you, you're good for something as well.
With your artichoke-like face"
- she repeated the idea that no
one else could be with Zampano: "And if I won't stay with him,
who else will do?" - and that she would remain with him; the
next morning, Il Matto drove Gelsomina (again imprisoned in the back
of Zampano's truck) to the jail so she could be there to greet him
when he was released; The Fool gave her his necklace as a souvenir
before walking away
- Zampano was surprised to see her, and her dedication
when she told him as they waded at the seashore: "Now my home
is with you"; but then, when
he claimed that he had saved her from her family's poverty: ("You're
better with me"), she realized his callous brutality and blurted
out: "You're
an animal! Nothing in your head!"
Hitchhiking Nun: La Suorina
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Gelsomina Playing the Trumpet With Her Signature Melody
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Gelsomina With Nun - Who Admired Her Dedication to Zampano
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- on the road, Zampano gave a ride to a nun named
La Suorina (Livia Venturiniand) and took her to a monastery just
before a cold rainy evening; they were able to stay one night in
a barn when Zampano lied that Gelsomina was his wife; the nun was
entertained by Gelsomina's playing of a trumpet with her signature
melody; the nun observed that Gelsomina's selflessness and pure
dedication to Zampano for many years were comparable to her own
sacred service to God: "We both are travellers: She follows
her God, I follow mine"
- but then in a stunning
exchange later that evening, when Gelsomina asked Zampano to marry
her: ("Now I'm ready even to marry you. We'll stay together.
Even a stone is good for anything"), he turned his back on her
and told her to stop thinking about things: "There is nothing
to think about";
when he refused to respond to her questions, she began playing
her trumpet and he commanded: "Stop it!"; the next morning,
Gelsomina waved a knowing and heart-felt goodbye to the nun - who
had just invited her to remain at the monastery [Note: This was Gelsomina's
3rd opportunity or offer to depart from Zampano that she refused:
(1) the circus family, (2) the Fool, and (3) the Nun.]
- after leaving the monastery, Zampano's truck came
upon Il Matto fixing his broken-down car's flat tire on a rural road;
during a brutal brawl between the two, Il Matto suffered severe
head injuries, complained about his broken watch (a symbol of his
life's end) and then collapsed dead next to the road; to cover
up the crime, Zampano dragged Il Matto's body (in a crucifix pose)
and dumped it in a creek and then pushed his car off a bridge (with
a fiery crash); they were now on the run from the law and a predictable
prison term for Zampano
- traumatized by Il Matto's (The Fool's) demise, for
the next ten days, the lifeless, mute, soul-injured Gelsomina couldn't
perform in the sideshows, wouldn't eat, was fearful of Zampano,
and only kept repeating: "Il Matto, he feels bad"; when
Zampano realized that Gelsomina was no longer profitable to him
and possibly
"crazy," he abandoned her while she took a short nap
outside - leaving her with blankets, the clothes she was wearing,
some money, and the trumpet
- four to five years later, Zampano was working for
the traveling Medini Circus; while walking in town, he heard the
same unforgettable song that Gelsomina often played on the trumpet
- it was being sung by a woman hanging up sheets; he was told that
the woman's father had taken in the feverish, sickened, mute and
a "little bit crazy" vagabond (Gelsomina) after she had
left the circus and was found near the beach; the woman had often
heard her play a trumpet, but then Gelsomina became severely ill
and didn't wake up one morning
Glancing Up at the Heavens
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Grasping at Sand in His Hands
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- in the tragic film's conclusion (a parallel to the
opening sequence's setting), the stony-hearted Zampano was finally emotionally affected (with grief or remorse?) by the
news of Gelsomina's death; after his dull and uninspiring strong-man
performance in the circus, he became drunk in a bar, was thrown
out, brawled against four men outside, and stumbled alone to the
seashore in the darkness while yelling:
"I want to be alone. Alone!"; there, he waded into the
edge of the water, fell onto the sand, looked up to the heavens,
broke down into tears and vainly grasped at the sand that slipped
through his fingers
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Gelsomina's Departure with Zampano in His 3-Wheeled Motorcycle-Driven Truck
Strongman Zampano Performing For Small Crowds
Gelsomina Applauding Zampano's Act
Sleeping with Zampano Inside His 'Truck'
Gelsomina's Question to Zampano About Her Sister Rosa: "You did it the same
way with Rosa?"
Strange Confrontation - Gelsomina Entertained a Disabled Boy
First Upward View of Tightrope Walker Il Matto ("The Fool") (Richard
Basehart)
Il Matto Playing a Tiny Violin In a Ragged Circus Tent
Zampano and Gelsomina: Workers in the Circus
Il Matto Wearing Wings, a Silver Hat and a Bumblebee Tights Costume
A Despairing Gelsomina to Il Matto: "Nobody needs me. What for do I live?...Why
am I born to this world?"
Il Matto: "Maybe he likes you?"
Gelsomina to Zampano: "You're an animal!"
Zampano's Rejection of Gelsomina's Proposal of Marriage
Gelsomina's Sad Goodbye Wave to Nun
The Fool with Severe Head Injuries and Broken Watch
The Death of the Fool
Gelsomina: "Il Matto, he feels bad!"
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